this post was submitted on 16 Sep 2025
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[–] Sprinks@lemmy.world 2 points 15 hours ago (2 children)

I was born in 96 when my mom was 19. I remember sometime in middle to early high school looking up the generation year cut offs and thinking it was wild my mom and i were considered the same generation; her being the start of the generation and me being the end.

Obviously thats no longer the case with current generation year cutoffs, but im now starting to see 96 included as the first year of gen Z which feels...wierd. I definitely dont connect with people of gen Z easily because it feels like...well...a different generation, but at the same time I feel a disconnect with other, older, millenials because they tend to remember the 90s more than myself. Im not sure about anyone else, but being born in 96 feels like being stuck between two generations that you partially relate to, but not really.

[–] MudMan@fedia.io 1 points 14 hours ago

Yeah, as people insist on new names for "the youths" that they can use to write derisive articles it becomes almost impossible to match any of these arbitrary things.

By most metrics "Gen Z" is coming up on their thirties, but people still want to flag them as "the kids", where the Gen A batch that's still in school still aren't the target, so you end up with this weird ongoing reclassification. It's all kinda dumb. At the end of the day if you think about it anything since just pre-Millenials is all the same bundle of anxiety-ridden online natives that can't afford a house. They're all just at different stages of that process. The big cutoffs happened in the 00s with the one-two punch of the post 9/11 US imperialist nonsense and the big mortgage crisis. Everything after is just fallout.

[–] Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 points 4 hours ago

You're a little younger than me (young millennial), and a little older than my sister (old Z). And yeah, there's definitely a fuzzy border. We grew up with technology, which sounds like a gen Z experience, but that technology was not pervasive and everywhere, it was more like appointment viewing. We had the experience of really noticing the technology improving, which is more millennial. I relate to some of the typical millennial children's shows, like early Pokemon, Batman TOS, X-Men, and I'm familiar with many more even if I didn't like them myself (like Rugrats, Hey Arthur, Doug). But the shows that made up more of my core viewing are a little too recent to be called millennial, like Avatar, Kim Possible, and Lilo & Stich the series.

Also, while you had a millennial parent, I did not. Heck, I didn't even have gen X parents. My old folks are both younger boomers. Which I'm sure introduces its own variable to the equation.